Shanghai Alleys, Theatrical Practice, and Cinematic Spectatorship: From

Shanghai Alleys, Theatrical Practice, and Cinematic Spectatorship: From

Journal of Current Chinese Affairs China aktuell Des Forges, Alexander (2010), Shanghai Alleys, Theatrical Practice, and Cinematic Spectatorship: From Street Angel (1937) to Fifth Generation Film, in: Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, 39, 4, 29-51. ISSN: 1868-4874 (online), ISSN: 1868-1026 (print) The online version of this and the other articles can be found at: <www.CurrentChineseAffairs.org> Published by GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Institute of Asian Studies in cooperation with the National Institute of Chinese Studies, White Rose East Asia Centre at the Universities of Leeds and Sheffield and Hamburg University Press. The Journal of Current Chinese Affairs is an Open Access publication. It may be read, copied and distributed free of charge according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. To subscribe to the print edition: <[email protected]> For an e-mail alert please register at: <www.CurrentChineseAffairs.org> The Journal of Current Chinese Affairs is part of the GIGA Journal Family which includes: Africa Spectrum • Journal of Current Chinese Affairs • Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs • Journal of Politics in Latin America • <www.giga-journal-family.org> Journal of Current Chinese Affairs 4/2010: 29-51 Shanghai Alleys, Theatrical Practice, and Cinematic Spectatorship: From Street Angel (1937) to Fifth Generation Film Alexander DES FORGES Abstract: This article argues that a certain type of Shanghai film of the Republican period, exemplified by 1937’s Street Angel (侀䏃໽Փ, Malu tianshi), makes use of a specific mode of spatial organization, modelled on the theatre, to represent the urban environment. In the case of Street Angel, and later on in 1964’s Stage Sisters (㟲ৄྤྍ, Wutai jiemei), the interaction between performers and audiences characteristic of the Shanghai theatre experience serves as a crucial ground on which to base calls to political action. For a variety of related reasons, both the city of Shanghai and this mode of spatial organization so closely associated with it vanish from the big screen in the 1980s and 1990s, and begin to make a return only at the turn of the new century. Manuscript received 12 November 2010; accepted 3 January 2011 Keywords: China, Shanghai, film, theatre, urban space, Stage Sisters Dr. Alexander Des Forges is an Associate Professor of Chinese at the University of Massachusetts-Boston. He is the author of Mediasphere Shanghai: The Aesthetics of Cultural Production (Honolulu: University of Ha- wai’i Press, 2007). His current research interests include comparative literary theory and cultural studies in the early modern and modern peri- ods (16th through 20th centuries). E-mail: <[email protected]> 30 Alexander Des Forges Introduction It is difficult to think of Shanghai without movies: The first movie screening in China took place in Shanghai only a year after cinema was invented in Paris; Shanghai was known not only for its grand movie theatres, but also for its movie industry, and the city proved to be an inspirational setting for domestic and foreign directors and producers alike. Yet for an interesting period in late 1980s and early 1990s, roughly coinciding with the height of the “Fifth Generation” wave, Shanghai was nearly absent from the big screen; even Zhang Yimou’s Shanghai Triad (᧪ଞ᧪᧪ࠄ໪ယ‟, Yao a yao, yao dao waipo qiao, 1995) includes only the briefest view of the Bund from across the Huangpu River as its sole outdoor city scene. This is in striking contrast to Beijing, which featured prominently during this period as a distinctive urban setting in a wide variety of films, including Troubleshooters (⥽Џ, Wan zhu, 1988), Black Snow (ᴀੑᑈ, Ben ming nian, 1990), Looking for Fun (ᡒῖ, Zhao le, 1993), Beijing Bastards (࣫Ҁ䲰。, Beijing zazhong, 1993), In the Heat of the Sun (䱑 ܝ➺⟯ⱘ᮹ᄤ, Yangguang canlan de rizi, 1994), and Sons (ܦᄤ, Erzi, 1996), among others. Shanghai was favoured as a setting for television series in the 1980s and ‘90s, and returned in force to the big screen at the end of the 1990s in films ranging from mainstream productions like Beautiful New World (㕢呫ᮄϪ⬠, Meili xin shijie, 1999) to more avant-garde works like Suzhou River (㯛Ꮂ⊇, Suzhou he, 2000), underlining its unusual ab- sence from the movies in the years immediately preceding. This filmic neglect of Shanghai is no coincidence; it can be best explained through analysis of a particular mode of cinematic production and consumption, tied to a specific understanding of urban space that has been characteris- tic of Shanghai since the 1880s. Working off of Miriam Hansen’s concept of “vernacular modern- ism”, Zhang Zhen’s study of early Chinese cinema, An Amorous History of the Silver Screen, breaks important new ground in the study of urban film by tying the analysis of film form to a multiplicity of screen practices that helped to constitute a culture of movie-going in 1920s and ‘30s Shanghai. Zhang makes a compelling argument for the significance of an early “cinema of attractions” and suggests that amusement halls such as Great World (໻Ϫ⬠, Da shijie) and New World (ᮄϪ⬠, Xin shijie) “mobilized” the gaze of urban residents who were in the process of becoming movie- goers (Zhang 2005: 58-64). But although Zhang notes, in passing, the significance of the Shanghai theatre as a precedent for cinema – most of From Street Angel (1937) to Fifth Generation Film 31 the grand, new-style cinemas built in the 1920s included the word “thea- tre” (᠆䰶, xiyuan) in their names – she does not explore these connec- tions in detail (Zhang 2005: 123-127). It is precisely this imbrication of theatrical and cinematic spectatorship – mediated through images of the urban alley (䞠ᓘ, lilong, or ᓘූ, longtang) – that this article will argue constitutes a distinctively Shanghainese mode of representation in films of the 1930s and ‘40s, exemplified by Yuan Muzhi’s Street Angel (侀䏃໽ Փ Malu tianshi, 1937), and revisited in Xie Jin’s Stage Sisters (㟲ৄྤྍ, Wutai jiemei 1964). This mode continues to generate formal echoes more than half a century later, even in films such as Beautiful New World (cf. Palmer 2007). Street Theatre We begin with two images published in Shanghai in the early 1890s that mark a new way of perceiving and representing urban space. These im- ages are not of skyscrapers built according to European specifications along the Bund, nor are they vistas of the broad commercial avenues filled with horse-drawn carriages in the English Settlement and the French Concession. The scale is much smaller and more intimate, yet the urban space we find in these lithographs represents change at a much deeper level than the mere broadening of streets or the construction of buildings in monumental styles that were then fashionable in London or Tokyo. The first of these images tells a generic tale of petty deception, but the space in which it unfolds – a back alley or lilong typical of Shang- hai – is presented in distinctive fashion (see Figure 1). The central space is hemmed in by buildings on all sides, but each portion of each wall that we see has either a door or a window, suggest- ing constant interaction between “inside” and “outside”, as in the case of the woman leaning out to hang her laundry to dry over the alley. Indeed, our own view of the scene might be from a window or balcony looking out over the alley. The second image, a lithographic print like the first, focuses more simply on a woman looking down from a balcony to ob- serve the goings-on in the alley below (see Figure 2). In this case, the viewer is clearly positioned at the same level as the woman, as though looking across from a building two alleys away. An intervening lower building screens the object of the woman’s gaze from the viewer, ensuring that the second-level view across is the focus of the print. 32 Alexander Des Forges Figure 1: An Illustrated Explanation of Local Customs Source: Wu 1929a. The printing and dissemination of these types of images in illustrated periodicals from the 1880s forward, as well as in collections like An Illus- trated Explanation of Local Customs (乼֫ᖫ೪䁾, Fengsu zhi tushuo) and A Hundred Beauties of Shanghai (⍋Ϟⱒ㡋೪, Haishang baiyan tu), works to construct a distinct type of interactive urban space, an arena in which windows look out onto other windows, barriers between one rooftop laundry space and the next are insignificant or non-existent, and the sounds and smells of the city waft easily in even through closed shutters. Urban crowding and the associated interconnection of sensory land- scapes had of course been common in literary representations of Chinese metropolises like Suzhou, Yangzhou and Nanjing for centuries (Gu 2005). The novelty of these Shanghai images lies primarily not in their faithful recording of a sudden and unprecedented “modern” urban real- ity – although the built structure of the lilong does differ in important ways from the alleys in other Chinese cities (Lu 1999: 138-185; Liang From Street Angel (1937) to Fifth Generation Film 33 2008) – but rather in the adoption of a new model for the representation of urban streets and alleys: the theatre. Figure 2: A Hundred Beauties of Shanghai Source: Wu 1929b. Theorists of American and European film have tended to draw a sharp distinction between presentational (“theatrical”) style, in which the action is seen primarily from one (frontal) angle, as though a stage performance were being filmed, and representational (“cinematic”) style, which makes use of the classic cinematic techniques that we have come to expect in narrative film: shot/ reverse shot structure, tighter focus on individual characters, editing for narrative coherence, and so on.

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